Australia inks $660 million hydrogen pact with Germany  
      An artist’s impression of a Hydrogen Hub at Quayside terminal in Townsville. (AAP Image/Scott Radford-Chisholm)      Marion Rae
  Sep 13, 2024    1
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    Hydrogen  Renewables
     A joint development deal with Germany will unlock $660 million of  shared investment in Australian hydrogen projects, providing some  certainty after setbacks.
      Announcing the pact on Friday, Energy Minister Chris Bowen said the  joint funding, available over the next 10 years, would support new  commercial supply and access to the European market, including through  guaranteed offtake.
      The H2Global deal “marks a significant step in building a strong  international hydrogen market, supporting energy security in Australia  and Germany,” he told the Asia-Pacific Hydrogen Summit in Brisbane.
       Hydrogen is expected to be the foundation of new clean energy  industries in Australia and rival net-zero economies, as a feedstock to  make green iron and steel, ammonia, fertilisers and fuels.
      But after a pullback in investment, including by Andrew Forrest’s  Fortescue Group, Mr Bowen acknowledged some projects would not proceed,  but slammed those who had “gloated” about the setbacks.
      “Let me be clear: Australia’s green hydrogen pipeline is alive and healthy,” he said.
      The minister said green hydrogen would be on the ballot paper at the  next federal election, with a Peter Dutton government to see “support  stall, investment chilled and an expensive and risky frolic with nuclear  energy instead”.  
      “To be fair, the LNP are at least explicit. They would abolish Hydrogen Headstart and the production incentives.”
      In recent months, some have declared Australia’s green hydrogen industry is dead, he told the industry and investment audience.
       “In fact, they’ve celebrated in it …This says more about them and  their climate inactivism than it does about Australia’s green hydrogen  pipeline.”  
      Australian researchers are also examining how green iron can support  the decarbonisation of Germany’s economy, while maintaining jobs and the  productive capacity of core industries. 
      The University of NSW has been selected to lead a team of academic and industry experts on behalf of Australia’s consortium.   
      “All of this feeds into the broader climate cooperation agreement  that Australia and Germany are entering in to,” Mr Bowen said. 
      “Australia’s green hydrogen pipeline is one of the strongest in the  world. The government of Germany agrees and they are putting their money  where their mouth is.”  
      Germany is already involved in a Townsville hydrogen hub, a methanol  production plant in Port Augusta, the Hysata electrolyser production  facility in Port Kembla, and the ATCO project to develop an electrolyser  and ammonia facility in the Illawarra.  
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